58 Wis. 499 | Wis. | 1883
The bankrupt act provided, in effect, that, with the exception of certain exempt property, the adjudication in bankruptcy, the appointment of the assignee, and the requisite assignment to him by the judge or register, should, by operation of law, vest the title to all the estate, real and personal, of the bankrupt in the assignee, with all his deeds, books, and papers relating thereto, and that such assignment should relate back to the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy. Sec. 5044, E. S. of U. S. So sweeping was
The question here presented is whether the defendant, by virtue of the discharge, was released from the indebtedness in question to the plaintiff. The determination of that question depends upon the provisions of the bankrupt act. The certificate of discharge recited that the bankrupt had conformed to all the requirements of law in that behalf. The court thereby ordered' that the bankrupt be forever discharged from all debts and claims which by said act were made provable against his estate, and which existed July 3, 1877, on which day the petition for adjudication was filed against him, excepting such debts, if any, as Were by said act excepted from the operation of a discharge in bankruptcy. There is no claim that the plaintiff’s debt was of such a nature that it was by the act expressly excepted from the operation of the discharge. In other words, there is no claim that the discharge was invalid by reason of any of the things mentioned in secs. 5110, 5112, 5113, 5116, 5117, E. S. of U. S. But the certificate did not purport to forever discharge the bankrupt from all his debts and liabilities, but only from all such “ debts and claims ” as were by said bankrupt act “ made provable against his estate.” This was substantially the provision of sec. 5119, E. S. of U. S., which, in effect, declared that “ a discharge in bankruptcy, duly granted, shall . . . release the bankrupt from all debts, claims, liabilities, and demands which were or might have been proved
In Ex parte Taitt, 16 Ves. Jr., 196, there was a petition by joint creditors to be admitted to prove their debts under a separate commission, and that the estate be divided' as under a joint commission. The earlier English cases cited by counsel were there considered by Lord EldoN, who observed that “ the rule adopted by Lord Haedwioee was that the joint creditors should be permitted to prove for the purpose only of assenting to or dissenting from the certificate, and going xipon the surplus, if any, after satisfaction of the separate creditors; but, if they wished to have a distribution of the joint estate, they should be put to file a bill and wind up the whole,— the proportions.belonging to the bankrupt being part of his separate estate. That was followed without interruption for half a century, and until it was disturbed by Lord Thublow. . . . Lord Nosslyu after-wards restored the old rule (in Ex parte Elton, 3 Ves. Jr., 238), but with this peculiarity: permitting the joint creditors to prove if there were no joint effects, and stating that the account of the joint estate should be taken in the bankruptcy.” To that rule thus stated the very cautious chancellor gave his entire sanction by declaring that it was “ right.” This same test of the existence or non-existence of partnership assets seemed to prevail in the later English cases cited by counsel. Ex parte Peake, 2 Rose, 54; Ex parte Jackson, 3 Madd., 231. In the same year, and a few months earlier, that opinion of Lord NosslyN also received the sanction of the supreme court of the United States in Tucker v. Oxley, 5 Cranch, 34, where Chief Justice Maesi-iali, said: “Incon-formity with the uniform exposition of the act, he (the lord chancellor) permitted the partnership creditor to prove his debt before the commissioners of' the (individual) bankrupt,
In Wilkins v. Davis, supra, Judge Lowell observed: “That a joint creditor can prove under a separate bankruptcy, though not to compete in the separate assets, is fully admitted in the United States. The early case of Tucker v. Oxley went beyond this, and has been modified; but the general proposition laid down by the court, that such a debt
The adjudications of bankrupt courts as to provable debts and the marshaling of assets have not always been harmonious. In In re Frear, 1 N. B. R., 665, it was held by Judge Blatcheojsd that copartnership debts were provable against an individual bankrupt whether there were any partnership assets or not, at the same time indicating that the only difference it made was in the distribution of the assets. In In re Jewett, id., 491, like Tucker v. Oxley, supra, a partnership debt was proved against, the individual bankrupt who had previously bought out the other member of the firm. There was no evidence of the solvency of the other partner, nor that there were any partnership assets, and it was held by Judge Deummond that the partnership creditors were entitled to be paid pari passu with individual creditors. To the same effect was In re Downing, 3 N. B. R., 748, per DilloN, J.; In re Rice, 9 N. B. R., 373. In In re Abbe, 2 N. B. R., 75, it was held by Field, J., that “where a member of a late copartnership files his individual petition under the bankrupt act, and inserts in his schedules debts contracted by said copartnership, and there areno copartnership assets to be administered, he will be entitled to be discharged from all his debts, individual as well as copart-nership; ” and that it was unnecessary in such case to make the other partners parties to the proceedings. To the same effect was In re Didwell, 2 N. B. R., 229. In In re Melick,
In In re Knight, 8 N. B. R., 436, Deummond, J., reviews the Massachusetts cases cited by counsel, and holds that “ where there are partnership and individual debts, and there are no partnership assets and no solvent partner, the debts of the firm and of the individual member can be proved [against the individual bankrupt], and the estate is to be distributed pari passu among the creditors.” In so deciding he disclaimed trenching in any degree upon the rule that in the case of a partnership joint property should go to pay the joint debts, and the separate property to pay the separate debts. In Wilkins v. Davis, supra, Judge Lowell ably reviews the English and American cases, and holds “that if one member of a firm becomes bankrupt and obtains his discharge, he is. released f-rom all his debts, joint and separate.”
Undoubtedly there are decisions to the contrary of some of these cited, but it is believed that they are mostly where it appeared affirmatively that there were partnership assets or business still existing, or where the bankrupt’s petition made no reference to firm debts or firm assets, or did not ask to be relieved from such debts. These cases appear in briefs of counsel, and will be preserved for reference.
It is true that sec.-5121 makes express provisions for bankruptcy proceedings in case of partnerships, and expressly authorizes all the creditors of the company, and the separate creditors of each partner, to prove their respective debts therein, and then affirms the equitable rule of distribution. It is equally true that the act makes no express provision for the proof of partnership debts against individual bankrupts. But we are also to remember, as observed by Mr. Justice Beadley in Gray v. Rollo, supra, that “ the joint debtors are
By ilia Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.